France's Wealth Exposed
Volume XI, Issue 16

In the news…
Yep, the French ministers revealed their wealth on Monday. I was surprised they acquiesced to President François Hollande’s demand to expose their assets, but they did. Some turned up quite wealthy, others quite modest. Either way, I was personally opposed to such an invasion of privacy and wonder why anyone would want to be a politician under such conditions.
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Hollande, of course, is trying to salvage his reputation, which has the lowest ratings in the history of French presidency (29%). It’s funny to me that while he is trying to avoid a government made up of gauche caviar, (or champagne socialists), that American capitalists revere our wealthy as those who have worked hard and done well for themse
lves.
Several of the ministers declared wealth in excess of the 1.3 million threshold for the imposition wealth tax with most of it declared in property. “Laurent Fabius, foreign minister and former prime minister, was revealed as the wealthiest, with property in Paris and elsewhere worth 3.9 million, shares in Piasa, a French auction house, worth 1.2 million and 630,000 in unspecified other possessions. Mr Fabius is known to have a collection of art inherited from his art dealer father.” (Financial Times)
From our capitalist point of view, that isn’t really all that shocking — Americans who have the means to purchase property in Paris may not all be that wealthy, but are of the ‘means’ to invest and diversify. It’s not at all unusual for our own clients to have similar means.
The list of assets revealed can be comical, too. “Christiane Taubira, the feisty justice minister, included not just her 2008 Hyundai car, worth 13,000, but also her three bicycles worth a total of 900.” Hollande himself declared 1.17 million when he was elected last year — thanks to his 800,000 house on the Riviera and two apartments in Cannes, along with various possessions worth 15,000.
I fully expected his own government to mutiny, but they didn’t, and while the UMP Party is opposed to his tactics, he’s forging ahead with even further moves to clean up his credibility with voters.
Personally, I would like to see owning property and acquiring wealth in France become admirable rather than shameful. How does M. Hollande expect to tax a society that has no means? As the old saying goes: “You can’t get blood out of a turnip” — and so it is, you can’t get money out of the poor.
What don’t they understand about that? Or is it just my Americanism peaking through?
Curious to know what is the wealth status of each? Find out.
A bientôt,
Adrian Leeds
Director of The Adrian Leeds Group, LLC
Respond to Adrian: [email protected]
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